Aided by a bizarre play in which Cleveland runner David Murphy was fooled by a second ball on the field and tagged out, Cincinnati defeated the Indians 9-2 on Tuesday.

"That's one of the strangest things I've ever seen," Price said. "I'm sure that's going to go down as one of those plays we see between innings for years to come."

Johnny Cueto's fourth complete game of the season was overshadowed in the seventh inning when the Indians had a rally squelched after an errant warmup pitch from Cincinnati's bullpen came on the field, resulting in Murphy being caught off third base.

Lonnie Chisenhall drew a leadoff walk and Murphy singled. Yan Gomes' double cut the lead to 6-2 and moved Murphy to third as a ball thrown by reliever Jumbo Diaz rolled behind second base.

The confused Murphy mistakenly thought the ball was live and edged off third. Third baseman Ramon Santiago took the relay throw and made the tag.

"The timing of it was crazy," Murphy said. "I just didn't know where the ball came from. It was unbelievable."

Santiago was one of the few people on the field who knew the situation and called for shortstop Zach Cozart to make a throw.

"I was yelling: 'Give me the ball,' " he said. "I saw the other ball, but I knew we had a play."

"He said he understood our frustration, but they can't kill a play until the conclusion," Francona said. "It was perfect timing, and it's the responsibility of our coaches and runners to know what's going on. I can't fault Murph, though, because he saw the ball there and thought they couldn't throw him out."

Cueto (13-6) retired the next two hitters.

"I was confused," he said of the strange play. "I thought a fan threw the ball."

"Just when you think you've seen it all in baseball, you haven't," Santiago said. "You always see something new. That's why it's a beautiful game."

Santiago hit a three-run homer in the second against Josh Tomlin (5-8) to break a 1-all tie for his first home run since Aug. 16, 2013, playing for Detroit.

Cincinnati, which has been playing without All-Stars Joey Votto and Brandon Phillips, is 6-12 since the break as it struggles to stay in the NL playoff chase.

The Reds broke a 10-game losing streak at Progressive Field.

Big play

Price admitted the bizarre play gave the Reds a boost.

"It may have saved our bacon a little bit," he said. "At this point in time of the season, we'll do whatever we have to do to win a game."

Catcher Brayan Pena thought Diaz should be given some credit for his warmup pitch that missed its target by a couple of hundred feet.

"Johnny should buy Jumbo a big steak," he said.

Mr. Perfect

Cueto allowed two runs and hasn't lost since July 2. Cincinnati is unbeaten in Cueto's six career starts against Cleveland.

Trainer's room

• Reds Votto (strained left knee) who has been on the 15-day disabled list since July 8, is rehabilitating in Cincinnati. Price said Votto still is experiencing soreness in the knee and there's no timetable for his return.

• Indians Designated hitter Nick Swisher (strained right wrist) is expected to be available today after missing two games. Center fielder Michael Bourn (strained left hamstring) began a rehab assignment at Double-A Akron on Tuesday and could rejoin the Indians next week. He's hasn't played since July 5.

On deck

• Reds Right-hander Mat Latos (3-3) starts today as the series shifts to Cincinnati. He'll be maknig his 10th start after opening the season on the DL. Latos owns a 3.11 career ERA at Great American Ball Park, which is the lowest by any pitcher with at least 15 starts there.

• Indians Right-hander Danny Salazar (4-4) looks for his fourth consecutive win since returning from the minors. He has a 2.00 ERA, striking out 17 in 18 innings in his past three starts. Salazar has yet to face Cincinnati in his career.